AltWeeklies Wire

Perverts Beware: St. Louis Area Police Have Your Numbernew

U.S. Attorney Catherine Hanaway has made prosecuting child pornography offenders a top priority since her appointment in July 2005. For the fiscal year that will end on September 30, the justice department predicts that Eastern Missouri will have generated 76 child-exploitation cases, making it second only to central California.
Riverfront Times  |  Kathleen McLaughlin  |  09-05-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Squeeze is Reunited, Reinvented and Rejuvenatednew

One of the most enduring influences on melody-makers is a pair few would suspect: the Squeeze songwriting team of Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook.
Riverfront Times  |  Annie Zaleski  |  08-29-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Prisonshake Spent 15 Years on 'Dirty Moons'new

When Prisonshake released its last full-length, The Roaring Third, unleaded regular gas sold for $1.11 a gallon.
Riverfront Times  |  Annie Zaleski  |  08-22-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Recent Tiger Attacks Have Some in Missouri Calling for Tougher Exotic Animal Lawsnew

Missouri is one of 23 states that permit individuals to keep tigers and other big cats as pets. State law says only that owners must register their animals with a local law enforcement agency and that failure to do so is a misdemeanor.
Riverfront Times  |  Keegan Hamilton  |  08-22-2008  |  Animal Issues

America's Foremost Demonologist Leaves Our Head Spinningnew

"Most people don't understand demonology. They think demons are like ghosts and equate them with haunted houses," William Bradshaw says. "That's not what demonology is about." Ghosts, he continues, are the spirits of people who have died. Demons are evil spirits that have never been human.
Riverfront Times  |  Aimee Levitt  |  08-18-2008  |  Culture

'Weird Al' Yankovic Dares to be Honest About 'Straight Outta Lynwood'new

"Longevity" is not a word we usually associate with novelty artists, but "Weird Al" Yankovic has trumped his Dr. Demento peers by releasing twelve albums and capturing three Grammys since 1980.
Riverfront Times  |  Ryan Wasoba  |  08-11-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Arborists from Around the World Gather for the International Tree Climbing Championshipsnew

The tree-climbing championships are hosted and organized by the International Society of Arboriculture (ISA), a nonprofit advocacy group based in Champaign, Illinois. The competition has existed since 1976, but it has never received the kind of attention lavished upon similar outdoor events such as rock climbing and lumberjack sports.
Riverfront Times  |  Keegan Hamilton  |  08-01-2008  |  Recreation

One Missouri Midwife, Now That Her Trade is Legal, Decides to Advertisenew

Dana Albillo is doing something no one in St. Louis' underground home-birth network ever dared -- she's advertising. Soon after the Missouri Supreme Court ended the state's 48-year prohibition on non-medical professionals helping to deliver babies, Albillo bought an ad in AT&T's Yellow Pages for her fledgling business, Common Ground Midwifery Services.
Riverfront Times  |  Kathleen McLaughlin  |  08-01-2008  |  Sex

Immigrant Soccer Players from Across the Globe Go Balls Out at a St. Louis Parknew

La Liga Latino Americana de Futbol has grown from a weekend assemblage of 4 teams -- all hailing from the same small town in southwestern Mexico -- to 28 teams, with more than 1,000 players representing nearly every corner of the map: Nigeria, Kenya, Iraq, Brazil and Hungary among them.
Riverfront Times  |  Keegan Hamilton  |  07-25-2008  |  Sports

Craptastrophe: Record Rainfall Creates a Dung Dilemma for Farmersnew

Northeastern Missouri is home to a large number of industrial hog farms, known as concentrated animal feeding operations, or CAFOs. Anywhere from 2,500 to 10,000 or more pigs are housed under one roof, and the millions of gallons of manure is stored onsite in uncovered manmade lagoons. The unrelenting rains haved caused the lagoons to fill to the brim.
Riverfront Times  |  Keegan Hamilton  |  07-11-2008  |  Food+Drink

Sheryl Grossman Suffers from One of the Rarest Diseases the World Has Ever Knownnew

People with Bloom's Disease -- there are fewer than 300 worldwide -- seldom grow taller than four and a half feet or weigh more than 90 pounds. Most develop cancer by their mid-twenties, and they are prone to diabetes, allergies, asthma, pulmonary disease, ear infections and immune disorders. The men are sterile. There is no cure, and no one with this genetic disorder has ever lived past 48.
Riverfront Times  |  Aimee Levitt  |  06-27-2008  |  Science

Brian Barton Chooses Baseball Over Aerospace Engineering ... For Nownew

Baseball ain't rocket science. But if it were, that wouldn't stop rookie St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Brian Barton. He's pretty good at both.
Riverfront Times  |  Keegan Hamilton  |  06-27-2008  |  Sports

Wash. U. is at the Forefront of New Research to Find the Cause of Autismnew

Washington University psychiatrists Kelly Botteron and John Constantino are part of a national study that will use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to scan the brains of babies, specifically the brothers and sisters of autistic children. "No one has looked at kids this young," says Botteron, who specializes in brain imaging.
Riverfront Times  |  Kathleen McLaughlin  |  06-20-2008  |  Science

Prostitutes Turn to the Web as a Means of Empowermentnew

While the idea of escorts on the internet is nothing new, a new generation of local "providers" and "hobbyists" create a virtual red-light district.
Riverfront Times  |  Keegan Hamilton  |  06-13-2008  |  Sex

Photographer's My Chemical Romance Nightmare has a Happy Endingnew

Last week was a wild one for freelance photographer Nichole Torpea. The 22-year-old UMSL grad was shooting the May 3 My Chemical Romance concert at the Pageant for Riverfront Times, when, she says, she was assaulted by a member of the band's security team.
Riverfront Times  |  Chad Garrison  |  05-16-2008  |  Music

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